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India’s One-Legged Legacy

Singh promised growth and security, but pushed only the popular option, welfare spending.

 

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Manmohan Singh's four-year term in office has been resurrected in the last few months of its existence. When his government this week defeated a no-confidence motion in Parliament instigated by his former coalition partners, the communists, Indian television stations used a popular Bollywood song, "Singh Is King," as a backdrop. The choice of the song had a subtext: so far Prime Minister Singh has been more courtier than monarch. There was a palpable sense of relief among many urban Indians: a prime minister they desperately wanted to admire had at last shown strength of character. Now his government could move forward on the policy front.

His government has already announced its intention to pass a number of reforms, especially in the financial sector. Singh's own tabled statement in Parliament outlines legislative priorities like a right-to-education bill and a social safety net for workers in the informal sector. The likely end of India's nuclear pariah status may hog the headlines, but it is such welfare programs that have been the main focus of the Singh government.

The change in Singh's fortunes will come too late for the prime minister to reverse so many years of what a UBS analysis called always taking the "easier option." Despite this week's parliamentary vote, India must go for general elections by March of next year.

Singh took office promising "to combine the economics of growth with the economics of equity." We have no option, he said, but "to walk on two legs." However, pouring money into welfare is easy—opposition is confined to op-ed writers. Second-generation economic reforms that cut off wasteful subsidies or money-losing state firms affect large groups of voters and require immense political skills. Singh's tenure was notable for the frenetic activity that was carried out on the welfare side and the lack of forward movement on the growth side. Economic policy walked on one leg.

The outlay on education tripled, loans were waived for an estimated 35 million farmers and a rural workfare scheme, the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS), designed to provide income for "the poorest of the poor," was launched. Expenditure on poverty alleviation schemes is budgeted to touch 1 trillion rupees.

Singh's underlying assumption was that government outlays would lead to social outcomes. And his policies assumed an Indian state that was more honest, efficient and less creaky than it is. As one of his former advisers noted, "Singh has never lost his faith in bureaucracy and bureaucrats." His new flagship agency, NREGS, is the fifth most corrupt of 11 public services in terms of bribes that poor people had to pay to get benefits, according to a survey by the Transparency International Centre for Media Studies. Education is a similar tale of money spent, with little impact on the quality of teaching.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: vikramkhanna @ 07/29/2008 5:51:57 AM

    Just wanted to point out that there was no 'No Confidence' motion in the parliament. It was actually a 'Motion of Confidence' moved by the congress party to demonstrate its majority. Small but important difference.

  • Posted By: distantsmoke @ 07/28/2008 6:14:12 PM

    I'm confused. When Sen Obama demands more welfare spending for Americans Islamweek sees that as a good thing and Republicans are minions of Satan for opposing it. Yet this article seems to indicate that economic policies that would encourage growth and private enterprise would have been more fiscally responsible (in India at least). How did this article get past the Islamweek editorial board??

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